Camera flash therapy helps reduce jet lag

Camera flash therapy helps reduce jet lag

Timed flashes of light during sleep may be the best way to combat jet lag, a study has found.

Researchers found that exposing volunteers to short “camera flashes” of light as they slept reset their body clocks.

Using the flash therapy the night before making a long trip could help a traveller quickly adjust to a new time zone, the findings showed.

Jet lag, which occurs when the body is out of sync with a destination’s sleeping and waking hours, can cause fatigue, poor concentration and performance, a general feeling of malaise, and stomach upsets.

Light therapy treatments for sleep disturbance, which involve sitting in front of bright lights during the day for hours at a time, were already known to alleviate symptoms of jet lag.

But a new study of volunteers has shown that exposure to brief bursts of light while sleeping is far more effective.

Lead scientist Dr Jamie Zeitzer, from Stanford University Medical Centre in the US, said: “This could be a new way of adjusting much more quickly to time changes than other methods in use today.”

Even when the eyes are closed during sleep, light triggers signals from the retina to the “circadian system” in the brain that alters the biological clock.

For the study, Dr Zeitzer’s team recruited 39 volunteers aged 19 to 36 who were given a routine sleep-wake cycle for two weeks, going to bed and waking up at the same time every day.

Then the participants were exposed either to various frequencies of flashing light or continuous light for an hour as they slept.

The researchers found that two millisecond long bursts of light – similar to a camera flash – set off at 10-second intervals delayed the onset of sleepiness the next day by nearly two hours.

For volunteers exposed to continuous light, the delay was only 36 minutes.

Dr Zeitzer explained how flashing light therapy could help someone flying more than 2,000 miles from California to New York. The US West Coast is three hours behind the East Coast.

He said: “If you are flying to New York tomorrow, tonight you use the light therapy. If you normally wake up at 8am, you set the flashing light to go off at 5am. When you get to New York, your biological system is already in the process of shifting to East Coast time.”

Dr Zeitzer added: “We have found that most people can sleep through the flashing light just fine.”

The flashing light treatment could also help other groups who suffer body clock disturbance, from night shift workers to truck drivers, say the researchers whose findings are reported in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Flashing light is said to work better than continuous light partly because the gaps of darkness between flashes allow pigments in the eye that respond to light to be re-activated.

The retinal cells that transmit the light information to the brain also continue to fire for several minutes after the stimulus, said Dr Zeitzer.

Image credit: iStock

Latest News

  • Tourism

Flight Centre’s Big Red Sale starts today

Flight Centre’s biggest sale has just landed giving Aussies the chance to lock in more affordable holidays close to home and overseas with saving of up to 50 per cent. The Big Red Sale starts today, 9 May, and runs until 5 June 2024. Flight Centre Global Managing Director Andrew Stark said that after the […]

  • Cruise

Aurora Expeditions announces savings for solo travellers

Aurora Expeditions has today announced savings for solo travellers thinking of going north for the summer. Adventurous solo travellers can take advantage of no solo supplements, enjoying a guaranteed private cabin on select departures during Aurora’s Arctic 2024 season with plenty of options available on unforgettable voyages visiting Greenland, Svalbard, Northwest Passage, Iceland and more. […]

  • Aviation
  • Destinations

Etihad and Tourism officials launch free Abu Dhabi Stopover

Etihad Airways and the UAE’s Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi have announced the launch of Abu Dhabi Stopover which invites guests flying through to turn their stopover into a free hotel stay and holiday. The Abu Dhabi Stopover, exclusive to Etihad Airways, will enable passengers to enjoy a convenient free stay in […]

  • Destinations

Tropical North Queensland action-packed events calendar for adventure enthusiasts

Sporting enthusiasts and adventure seekers are gearing up for an action-packed year in Tropical North Queensland, with a lineup of sports events and adrenaline-pumping experiences set to take centre stage in 2024. Leading the charge is the highly-anticipated return of the Crankworx World Tour ‘Paradise Edition’ to Cairns from 22-26 May 2024. The mountain biking […]

  • Travel Agents

Disney Days returns with Inside Out 2 showing in Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne and Auckland

Time is running out for agents to register their Expression of Interest to an exclusive screening of the much-anticipated Disney and Pixar film, Inside Out 2, hosted by Disney Destinations Australia/New Zealand team and partner United Airlines. Places are limited and applications must be in by 17 May. In addition to the screening of the […]

  • Cruise

Aranui Cruises slashes prices with No Single Supplement and Half Price offers

French Polynesian cargo cruise line Aranui Cruises is slashing thousands off its 2025 Austral and Marquesas Islands cruises with an autumn sale offering 50 per cent off the second guest in a twin share room and no single supplement for solo travellers. On sale until June 21, 2024, Aranui’s 12-day roundtrip voyage from Papeete to […]

  • Destinations

Raes on Wategos celebrates 30th birthday and guests get the presents

World famous luxury boutique hotel Raes on Wategos, in Byron Bay, has launched its 30th birthday celebrations with a Raes Indulgent Escape package. Available for all stays of two nights or more, from June to August, the curated package offers an invitation to indulge in a shared celebration of Raes 30th birthday, whilst revelling in […]